SLC Geog Blog | Geography at St. Lawrence College, Athens



IGCSE GEOGRAPHY

CASE STUDIES

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These case study summaries have been prepared to help you get top marks on the longer 7 or 8 mark questions.

LEARN SOME OF THESE SPECIFIC FACTS TO IMPRESS THE GCSE EXAMINERS

It goes without saying that these examples may not cover every single question so you need to look at your case studies in your files too.

And remember to think on your feet (use logic)in the exams!!!!!

GOOD LUCK!!!

Case Study 1 . Coastal protection on the New Forest coastline of the South UK

• New Forest coastline in Hampshire has clay and sand cliffs of 30m which have retreated 60m since 1971 – now being protected by concrete sea wall and groynes

• Mudflows and landslips at Barton on Sea after heavy rains – working with nature by constructing rock revetments and groynes

• Hurst spit vulnerable to erosion – now deciding whether to leave it to nature or protect it

• Marshland with wildlife value from Keyhaven to Lymington – so nature reserve created and New Forest named as National Park

Case Study2. Flooding of the Mississippi River, USA (MEDC)

Mississippi is 3800km long

Flows through ten states

Has over 100 tributaries

Has a drainage basin covering 1/3 of the USA

Causes of 1993 flooding:

• Heavy rain in April 1993 saturated the upper Mississippi basin

• Thunderstorms in June caused flashfloods

• Mid July 180mm of rain in one day

• Levees in nearby towns collapsed

Effects of 1993 flooding:

• 43 deaths

• 50,000 people evacuated

• 26,000km of land flooded

• $2.46 billion crop losses

• River traffic stopped for several months

• $12 billion in damages

• Contents of and the buildings themselves destroyed

• Threat of disease from sewage

• Insurance claims high

• Stagnant water attracted mosquitoes and rats

Management:

• 6 huge dams and 105 reservoirs

• Afforestation to delay runoff

• Strengthening the levees with concrete mattresses 25mx8m

• Making the course shorter and straighter - from 530km to 300km by cutting through the neck of meanders to get the water passed towns more quickly to the sea

• Diversionary spillways – overflow channels 9km long

• Less construction on the floodplain eg St Louis.

Case Study 3. Flooding of the Brahmaputra and Ganges Rivers, Bangladesh (LEDC)

Causes of 1998 flooding:

• Monsoon season- 80% of rain falls June to September

• Deforestation in the Himalayas increases runoff below

• Urbanisation – building on floodplains

• 1998 both rivers peaked at the same time

• Silt had been deposited near the mouth blocking the main channel

• Global warming melting Himalayas

• Poorly maintained embankments

• Flat low lying land over 80% of Bangladesh

Effects in 1998:

• 70% of land in Bangladesh affected

• 2/3rds of people affected

• Dhaka 2ms deep in water

• Electricity supply cut off for several weeks

• Wells contaminated and not safe for drinking

• 7 million homes destroyed

• 25 million homeless people

• 1300 approximate death toll

• 2 million tonnes of rice destroyed

• Roads, bridges,airports and a third of the railway destroyed

• $1.5 billion damages

Management:

Since 1989 Bangladesh has been trying to:

Build 5000 flood shelters with stilts to save lives

Improve forecasting with satellite technology

Early warning system with megaphones

Build dams

Control water with sluice gates and water pumps

Heighten embankments on side of river to 7m- more than 7500km already in place

Case Study 4. The Three Gorges Dam, China (for flood protection AND HEP)

• In 1998 3000 deaths and 30 million people homeless from Yangtze flood

• Dam built at Sandouping (to be totally finished in 2012 but already functioning)

Advantages (Economic, social and environmental)

• 100 million people downriver protected as water dischrged through dam when necessary

• HEP needed for China's growing industry and for domestic use too (China uses 40% world power)

• It will provide for 2% of China's energy needs

• Tourism increased on lake

• Improved shipping as larger cargo boats (up to 10,000 tonnes) can travel upstream to Chongqing

• New settlements have better services eg water, sewage etc

• Disadvantages (Economic, social and environmental)

• 1.3 million people relocated often without adequate compensation

• 4 cities, 8 towns and 356 villages submerged

• Temples and sacred places flooded

• Factories submerged releasing toxic waste into water

• Silt builds up behind dam so does not fertilise fields downstream

• Risk of earthquakes cracking dam and causing flooding

• 27 billion pounds to build it

• Loss of species like the Yangtze river dolphin

Extra case study: The Aswan Dam (better to learn the Three Gorges!)

Aswan is a city on the Nile in Egypt.

Two dams on the river: the Aswan High Dam and Aswan Low Dam (6km apart) with Lake Nasser behind.

Benefits of dam construction

• Without the 3,600m dam the Nile would flood each year during summer so dam needed to protect farmland and cotton fields. Dam stopped major floods in 1964 and 1973.

• Provides water for agriculture to stop widespread drought and famine.

• Generates energy - hydroelectric output of 2.1 gigawatts - produced around half of Egypt's entire electricity production in the 1960s.

• A new fishing industry has been created around Lake Nasser.

Problems of dam construction

• Dam construction flooded much of lower Nubia

• Over 90,000 people lost their homes.

• Lake Nasser flooded valuable archeological sites.

• The silt which was deposited in the yearly floods, and made the Nile floodplain fertile, is now held behind the dam.

• Silt deposited in the reservoir is lowering the water storage capacity of Lake Nasser.

• Poor irrigation practices are waterlogging soils and bringing salt to the surface.

• Mediterranean fishing declined after the dam was finished because nutrients that used to flow down the Nile to the Mediterranean were trapped behind the dam.

• The red-brick construction industry, which used delta mud, is also severely affected.

• Significant erosion of coastlines (due to lack of sand, which was once brought by the Nile) all along the eastern Mediterranean.

Case Study 5. Hurricane Floyd, USA 1999 (MEDC)

Intro

• Formed in Atlantic Ocean off coast of Africa

• Began 2 September 1999

• Cat 4 hurricane (211-240 kph) in Bahamas by 13 and 14 September

• Weakened by time reached USA near Cape Fear, N Carolina

• Tropical storm by time reached New England

Effects

• 14 states (Florida to Maine) hit – N Carolina worse hit

• 79 deaths

• 47 people died from storm of 500mm rain and floods in N Carolina

• 4 million evacuated in N Carolina, Georgia and Florida

• 1 million had no electricity or water

• 4,000 Pennsylvanians homeless

• 25000 claimed insurance - $460 million

• 42973 homes damaged – 11779 destroyed

• 144854 asked for assistance

• 10x increase in Alabama benefits applications

• 105580 people went to shelters

• $1 billion agricultural losses -10% N Carolina tobacco lost

• N Carolina 500 roads impassable

• Storm surge in Nassau sunk boats

• Beaches in Bahamas destroyed – Wrightsville beach 20m sand on roads

Prediction

• National hurricane Centre in Florida government run

• Use geostationary satellites

• Allowed 2.5 mil to be evacuated

• N Carolina 800,000 evacuated – caused traffic on Interstate 26

• 150km journey took 10 hrs

Preparedness/Buildings/Landuse planning

• Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) gave advice for family disaster plan and disaster supply kit

• Building codes to construct earthquake proof buildings – not always applied though

• High risk coastal locations identified based on past hurricanes and surges

Building limited here

Case study 6. CYCLONE ONE BRAVO, BANGLADESH 1997 (LEDC)

Intro

• Formed in Bay of Bengal

• Struck SE coast of Bangladesh on Monday 19 May 1997

• 250kph winds struck Cox’s Bazaar and Chittagong

• 4 million people living there

• 8 Mount Everest expeditions trapped in basecamp

Effects

• 111 died

• 7000 injured

• 2m high tidal surges

• Cut communications

• 500,000 homeless as mud and thatch destroyed

• 608 educational institutions destroyed

• Saltwater contamination of freshwater tubes and wells – 1 mil no clean water

• Fishing boats and nets destroyed

• 300,000 ha crops destroyed and 2000 cattle lost

• Electricity cut for one week in large towns

• Diarrhoea

• Destruction of roads, bridges and cyclone shelters

Management

• 1997 Government established Relief fund

• 500 families in each area received 32kg of rice in 2 months

• One bundle of corrugated iron to people with no house

• Red Crescent plane to survey damage

• 20 May 2000 Bangladesh red Crescent 400 tarpaulins, 100 jerry cans, 500 mugs, 500 crockery and aluminium plates, 50 bars soap and 1 Tonne rice

• Six medical teams and first aid volunteers

• International donors eg UN established new tube wells

• European Commission Humanitarian Committee donated 350,000 ecu

• CARE gave food, survival kits and water purification tablets

• Donations - Australia $77,000, Canada $100,000, France $35,000,

Sweden $240,000, UK $160,000, USA $640,000

Protection

• Earth embankments

• Cyclone shelters above sea level

• Education programmes

Case study 7: Drought in UK (MEDC)

UK has a temperate climate and can expect rain throughout year – but 1995-96 rains were less than average

Effects:

In N of England 200 tankers working 24hrs a day to transfer water to reservoirs

Garden hosepipes banned

Water rationing

Clay soiled dried, cracked and buildings collapsed

Grass stopped growing so cattle did not have enough food

Crops died

Forest fires as land dry

Legislation introduced to reduce home and industrial use of water

Case study 8. Drought in Ethiopia (LEDC)

Ethiopia is one of the poorest countries in the world

1983-84 saw the worst drought ever

Cause:

Rainfall level was considerably lower than average

Famine caused as civil war and poor roads made it difficult to transport food

Effects:

Farmland dried out

Animals died and crops failed causing widespread starvation and illness

500,000 people died

Millions of people needed food from MEDC charities like Oxfam and Bandaid

People migrated to other areas or refugee camps

People malnourished

People living in poverty

Case Study 9. Global warming: Tuvalu

Tuvalu has 11,000 people living on nine coral islands

It is south of the equator in the Pacific Ocean (midway between Hawaii and Australia). 

Tuvalu is the smallest of all nations, except for the Vatican. 

It has no industry, burns little petroleum and creates less carbon pollution than a small town in America. 

Causes of problems:

• Global warming because of increased greenhouse gases like CO2, methane, CFCs etc due to industry, car fumes etc

• Evident with the increasing intensity of tropical weather

• The increase in ocean temperatures

• And rising sea level

• Indeed, Tuvaluans face the possibility of being the first place in the world that has to be abandoned due to Global Warming

• Problematic as Tuvalu's highest land is 4.6 metres above sea level and most of the land is no more than a metre above the sea

Effects:

• Several times each year the waves from the Pacific come rushing over onto roads and into neighbourhoods. 

• In the centre of the island water comes up out of the coral bedrock and covers part of the airport and roads on the main island

• Floods homes that are not along the ocean.

• Local people think that if they are not completely flooded in 50 to 70 years they face increasingly strong storms and cyclones, changing weather patterns, damage to coral reefs from higher ocean temperatures, and flooding of all gardens. 

• Not growing enough food and decreasing fish catch if reefs are damaged would mean importing more food, more foreign exchange, and more health and diet problems.

• In November 2001 their government announced that they will have to abandon some of their islands. It is uncertain where the people will live.

Case study 10. Rainforest clearance in the Amazon, Brazil

1/3 of the world’s trees in Amazon

Estimates that 15-40% has been cleared

15 football pitches per minute cleared for:

• Slash and burn farming by Amerindian tribes like the Yanomami

• Subsistence farming by 25 million landless peasants

• Commercial cattle ranching for fast food chains

• 5300km Amazonian highway

• 900km railwayline from Carajas to the coast

• Timber/ logging companies

• Mineral mining eg diamonds, gold

• HEP

• Settlements eg Carajas

Effects:

• 30000 known species could be threatened

• May lose species that are as yet undiscovered

• Could lose the cure for diseases like Aids and cancer eg periwinkle found to cure Leukaemia

• Loss of Amerindians due to European diseases

• Loss of Amerindian traditions

• Soil erosion as lack of interception as canopy removed

• Loss of nutrients in soil

• Climate change and global warming

• Global balance of carbon and oxygen affected

Ways to protect Amazonia:

• Zones for different activities

• Loggers use selective logging practices

• Laws

• Limit licences to be given out

• Restricting use of heavy destructive machinery

• Encourage helilogging-uses helicopter

• Community forestry development scheme to educate local people

• Avoid construction where local tribes exist

• Fines and prosecution for lawbreaking

• Increased patrols

Case study 11. Desertification in the Sahel, Africa

• The Sahel is a narrow belt of semi arid land South of the Sahara in Africa

• Rainfall is only in 1 or 2 months of the year

• Rainfall is irregular with no rain in some years

• Droughts in Ethiopia (1983), Sudan (1984-91) and Somalia (1990s)

Causes of desertifi cation:

• Climate change and global warming allow less rain per year

• Water holes dry up

• Increased population growth – 3 or 4%increase each year

• Overgrazing of cattle, camels, goats etc increased 40% since 1980s

• Animals taken to wells which decreases height of water table

• Non drought resistant grasses die

• Farming on marginal land

• Farming the same crop each year

• Lack of fallow land

• Taking local trees for firewood

All these increase the size of the desert, increase soil erosion and cause famines for people

Case study 12. Mt. Pinatubo volcano in the Philippines 1991 (LEDC)

• 600 years dormant

• Island arc of Luzon in Philippines

• Philippines oceanic crust subducting under continental Eurasian plate – ie destructive plate margin

• Erupted June 1991

Eruption events and management

• 2 April steam explosions – vegetation killed and dust on villages

• PHIVOLCS set up to monitor eruption– 5000 pop evacuated in 10km zone

• 23 April continuing earthquakes- US Geological Survey set 7 seismographs at Clark Air Base

• NW slope villages evacuated

• 9 June 8 hr eruption with pyroclastic flows – Alert 5 - evacuated to 20km

• 10 June Clark Air Base evacuated

• 12 June Mushroom cloud 20km high – evacuated 30km – 58,000 people

• 15 June – eruption 40km high ash and 80km/hr pyroclastic flows – summit collapses. Heavy rain causes mudflows. Affects houses, bridges and river. Manila airport closed.

Effects

• 847 dead

• 300 killed by collapsing roofs

• 100 killed by lahars

• Aetas tribe refused to leave or died in evacuation centres from disease

• Measles, respiratory and gastric diseases

• 1.2 million lost homes

• 500,000 migrated to Manila

• 650,000 lost jobs

• 80,000 ha of cropland destroyed

• 1 million farm animals died

• No electricity for 3+ weeks

• $700 million loss of roads, water and telecomunications

• Ash caused global cooling 0.5 degrees

Case Study 13. Kobe, Japan earthquake 1995 (MEDC)

Intro

• 7.2 Richter on 17 January 1995

• 5.46am

• Epicentre 20km south of Kobe in Osaka bay

• 14km depth so much ground shaking and soil liquefaction

Effects

• Collapse of elevated roads and bridges eg 630m stretch of Hanshin expressway collapsed

• 103,500 buildings collapsed

• Only 20% buildings in CBD usable after earthquake – 62 high rise destroyed and only 19 rebuilt

• Port facilities (30% Japans commercial shipping) destroyed by soil liquefaction

• Ruptured pipes and poles stopped city’s gas and electricity

• 6300 deaths – 2900 more from suicides or neglect

• 35000 injuries

• Area of Nagata badly affected – timber framed buildings owned by poor were death traps

• 60% deaths were over 60 year old people

• 300 fires in city after gas pipes ruptured

• 300,000 immediately homeless – 20% of Kobe- 95,000 in temporary accommodation 1 year later

• $99.3 billion damage and $120 billion needed for reconstruction – only 7% had insurance

• 20,000 lost jobs

• Businesses moved away – Kawasaki shipping and Sumitomo rubber

Management

• State’s crisis management very poor

• Inadequate communication between government and administrators

• People running through street hit by falling debris ignoring fires

• 5 hr delay calling Self Defence Force / Army – only 200 troops

• Only 21 Jan 30,000 troops

• Took several days to designate disaster zone

• 3 days no electricity

• Delays in accepting international help – US military based in Japan, foreign medical teams and sniffer dogs

• Kobe’s resident’s believed that not at risk

Improvements since then

• All school children now have earthquake and drills 4X per year

• Earthquake kits can be bought in department stores – bucket, bottle water, food, radio, torch, first aid kit and protective head gear

• Earthquake Disaster Prevention Day 1 Sept every year for offices etc

Case Study 14. Earthquake in Turkey 1999 (LEDC)

Intro

• 17th August 1999 3AM

• 7.4 Richter scale

• Epicentre Izmit

• Eurasian and African plates

Human Effects

• 14,000 people dead

• 200,000 homeless

• Golcuk 80% buildings destroyed burying bodies

• Adapazari 65,000 buildings destroyed or unusable

• Tens of thousands living in tents and makeshift centres

Environmental Effects

• Tupras oil refinery set alight – 700,000T oil

• Uk based Oil Spill Response Company has booms, absorbent material and equipment to clear up

• Toxic waste dump at Petkim has cracks so risk of exposure

• Damage to PVC factory, waste treatment plant and incinerator

• Yalova chlorine works

Aid/Management

• American Red Cross 24 hr record for online disaster relief donations – 3 days later donations of $138,508

• Lincy Foundation donated $1 million

• American Red Cross 4 members of staff from International Emergency response unit

• American Red Cross 25,000 high protein biscuits and 25,000 comfort kits

• German and Norwegian Red Cross 2 field hospitals – 200 beds (in large tents) with field kitchens, mobile toilets etc

• 4000 Red Crescent tents total in and around Yalova

• Needed 10,000 more

• Diarrhoea

Contributing factors/what could be done better?

• Slow response as downed bridges, roads and telecoms

• Shoddy building construction – poor modern housing from mud brick

• Influx of people from Istanbul and Izmit

• Poor quality contractors

• Housing and Land mafia

• trained to look for steam releases and smell of sulphur

Case study 15. Oil spill: Exxon Valdez, Alaska 1989

• Disaster was on 24 March 1989

• Just after midnight the supertanker Exxon Valdez ran aground 40km out of Valdez, Alaska

• 50 million tonnes of crude oil was being carried

• There were perfect weather conditions but the captain was drunk

Effects:

• Oil extended 1700km from the boat

• 35000 sea birds died

• 3000 sea otters killed

• Local economy badly affected as depended on fishing industry

• Salmon hatcheries destroyed

• Land animals like Caribou poisoned by eating contaminated plants

• Oil on beaches

• Bald eagles and wading birds died as food chain affected

• Seals, shrimps and shellfish suffocated

Case study 16: Nuclear Explosion Chernobyl, Pripyat, Ukraine

• On April 26, 1986 the world's worst nuclear accident was caused by human error.

• Facility operators, in violation of safety regulations, had switched off important control systems at the Ukrainian plant's reactor number four and allowed it to reach unstable, low-power conditions

• A power surge led to a series of blasts, at 1.24 a.m., which blew off the reactor's heavy steel and concrete lid and sent a cloud of radioactive dust billowing across northern and western Europe, reaching as far as the eastern United States.

• Mainly Ukraine and neighboring Belarus affected, as well as parts of Russia and Europe.

• The Chernobyl Forum, a group of eight U.N. agencies, and the governments of Ukraine, Belarus and Russia, have estimated the death toll at only a few thousand as a result of the explosion. U.N. agencies have said some 4,000 people will die in total because of radiation exposure.

• Some estimates suggest the present death toll from the disaster at almost 734,000.

• The disaster was the object of a cover-up by secretive Soviet authorities who did not immediately admit to the explosion.

• A make-shift cover -- the 'Sarcophagus' -- was built in six months after the explosion. It covers the stricken reactor to protect the environment from radiation for at least 30 years. This has now developed cracks, triggering an international effort to fund a new encasement.

• Ukraine is seeking a further 600 million euros ($840 million) to help finance the new convex structure which will slip over the aging 'Sarcophagus' and allow the old reactor to be dismantled.

• Officials say it could be up to 100 years before the station is completely decommissioned.

• A 30-km (19-mile) exclusion zone is in place round the disaster site.

• Wildlife has made a comeback in this area and there are said to be more than 60 different types of mammals living there including wild boar and elk.

• 135,000 people were evacuated from the area, including 50,000 from the nearby town of Pripyat, Ukraine.

• Soil, plants and animals contaminated

Case study 17: Dairy Farming in an MEDC - UK

Name of farm owner - Mr Gilbert Hitchen

Location – Cheshire Plains

Relief – low lying, flat land

Soil – deep and rich growing good quality grass

Climate – reliable rain throughout year,

mild winters – so farmer does not need a lot of winter fodder

summers not very warm – so grass does not die

Size – 450 hectares

Animals – 190 dairy cows

Problems – herd destroyed because of foot and mouth disease in 1960s

Transport – M6 motorway nearby

Market – Manchester and Merseyside near

Technology – Refrigerated lorry to transport milk

Computers control food in relation to milk production

Income – milk sales

EU subsidies

Case study 18. Intensive subsistence wet rice farming in the Phillippines

Philippines is a group of 7000 islands in the Pacific Ocean

Name of farm owner – Maximo Casiendo

Location of farm – Barangay Busay

Since when has he had farm-1996 because of land reform act

Relief – Flat at 70m above sea level

Soil – fertile clay loams

Climate – average temperature 25 degrees and 1800m rainfall

Size of land – 2.6 hectares

Crops-rice,maize, vegetables and cassava

Labour- Mr Casiendo and his seven children

Machines- rice thresher (which he rents to others in village)

Needs to hire water buffalo to plough for 28 euros per hectare

Chemicals – Fertilisers (8 bags of nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium

Insecticide to kill leafhoppers

Herbicides to control weeds

Diesel- 30 litres per hectare for rice thresher

Output – 520 cavans of rice per year and maize (subsistence – most for family use but some may be sold)

Case study 19. Uganda : Youthful population and high growth

• 27.7 million people in Uganda

• Expected to double by 2025

• It could be the world's 12th most populous country by then

• Half population is under 15

• Average fertility per woman is seven children – low status of women

• Lack of education and access to contraception – in most parts of Uganda clinic do not exist

• President Museveni even believes that Uganda is underpopulated - he thinks that more people will boost the internal market and workforce to increase the economy!!! (very questionable!!!!)

Case study 20. China’s One Child Policy

• One child policy was introduced by Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping in 1979 to limit communist China's population growth. The policy limits couples to one child.

• China had been prone to floods and famine and wanted to feed all its people.

• Past view had been "the more people, the stronger we are"

• Families with one child were given free education, priority housing and family benefits.

Exceptions to the policy

• people living in rural areas were allowed to have two children, if the first child is female, to be farm workers.

• Couples could have another child if the first was disabled or died.

• Ethnic minorities (non-Hans)

What has this policy achieved?

• China's population of about 1.3 billion is said to be 300 million (.3 billion) smaller than it would likely have been without the enactment of this policy.

• The fertility rate has fallen to 1.7 births per woman.

• Such a reduction in fertility reduced the severity of problems that come with overpopulation, like epidemics, slums, overwhelmed social services (health, education, law enforcement, and more), and strain on the land from farming and waste

Why are people critical of this policy?

• There is a clear preference for male children as they provide the primary financial support for the parents in their retirement.

• bribery

• forced abortion

• infanticide

• spoiled children

Case study 21: HIV/Aids in Botswana

• In 2005 an estimated 270,000 people living with HIV (total population below two million)

• 24.1% of people have HIV/Aids

• Life expectancy less than 40 years in 2000-2005, a figure about 28 years lower than it would have been without AIDS.

• An estimated 120,000 children have lost at least one parent to the epidemic.

• First case 1985

Policy

• (1987-89) the screening of blood to eliminate the risk of HIV transmission through blood transfusion.

• (1989-97) information, education and communication programmes - Botswana National Policy on AIDS.

• (1997 onwards) education, prevention and comprehensive care including the provision of antiretroviral treatment for 19,000 people.

HIV prevention programme:

• Public education & awareness –

1. "ABC" of AIDS: Abstain, Be faithful and, if you have sex, Condomize.

2. safe-sex billboards and posters everywhere.

3. radio drama dealing with culturally specific HIV/AIDS-related issues and encouraging changes in sexual behaviour.

4. workplace peer counselling.

• Education for young people –

1. Youth Health Organisation (YOHO)has art festivals, dramas and group discussions.

2. School-based learning plays and teachers are given special training.

3. Talk show is broadcast twice weekly by Botswana Television.

• Condom distribution & education –

1. Installation of 10,500 condom dispensers in traditional and non-traditional outlets -condoms have been given out for free distribution.

2. Targeting of highly mobile populations – especially migrant workers travelling to other sub-Saharan African countries. Concentration on treatment of sexually transmitted infections, condom promotion and prevention education.

• Improvement of safety for blood transfusions- the national supply of HIV-free blood doubled by2005 because of better screening of donors and counselling.

• Prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV - in 2005 35.4% of women attending antenatal clinics in Botswana had HIV. Encouraging the use of antiretroviral treatment and non-breast feeding practices.

• Voluntary testing-same day results so more people are aware of their status.

• National antiretroviral therapy for 19,000 people

Case study 22. Population policy in Italy

• Low fertility rates of 1.23 children per family

• Ageing population

• Some women feel that they cannot work and cope with raising a family too

• Some men not doing sufficient household chores

• Poor service provision for childcare in pre school years

• Childless no longer bears a stigma

• Social pressure to marry and have childrenis less

• Even though head of the catholic church is in itlay – contraception use is high

• Yuppiedom – preference for luxury goods delays marriage and babies

• Less than 1/3 mothers have children before 28 years

• Young people live at home with parents longer to save rent etc which delays relationships and births

Solutions

• 10,000 euro bonus for births in a village in Mezzogiornio as mayor concerned that young people will not enter village otherwise

Case study 23. Overpopulation in Lagos, Nigeria

• By 1986 Nigeria had an estimated urban growth rate of 6% (more than twice that of the rural population) with the percentage of people living in urban areas estimated to have grown from 16% to 20%.

• By 2010, more than 40% of the population was living in the urban centers

• Inadequate fresh water for drinking water use as well as sewage treatment and effluent discharge. Lagos has the persistent problem of inadequate water supply which has lead to the unhealthy living conditions.

• Increased levels of pollution; air, water, noise, soil contamination.

• Irreversible loss of arable land and increases in desertification. Parts of the north in Nigeria are currently suffering from encroachment of desert from the Saharan desert.

• High infant and child mortality. Nigeria’s infant mortality rate is currently 100/1000 births. Comparing that figure with those of developed countries, it shows the growth of population has not created the chance for development of the health system.

• Increased chance of the emergence of new epidemics and pandemics. For many environmental and social reasons, including overcrowded living conditions, malnutrition and inadequate, inaccessible, or non-existent health care, the poor are more likely to be exposed to infectious diseases.

• Starvation, malnutrition or poor diet with ill health and diet-deficiency diseases (e.g. rickets). Famine is aggravated by poverty. About 70% of Nigerians live in rural areas and these regions are so underdeveloped that malnutrition has become a constant issue. With the pressure of population on the environment, there is a decline in both subsistence and export agriculture.

• Elevated crime rate due to drug cartels and increased theft by people stealing resources to survive. Regions with high rate of population are posed to threats of high crime rates. Lagos state for example in the past years has had an increase in crime rate.

Case study 24. Underpopulation in Australia

• Underpopulation occurs when there are far more resources in an area eg. food, energy, and minerals than the people

• Australia's landmass of 7,6 million km2

• 22 million people (double Greece only)

• Australia can export their surplus food, energy and mineral resources

• They have high incomes, good living conditions, and high levels of technology and immigration.

• Australia is the world's thirteenth largest economy and has the world's fifth-highest per capita income

• It is probable that standards of living would rise, through increased production and exploitation of resources, if population were to increase.

Case study 25. Tourism in Ayia Napa Cyprus, MEDC

Cyprus is third largest island in the Mediterranean

In 1998 tourism brought 879 million pounds to Cyprus

Ayia Napa is becoming a party town for young people (like Ibiza)

Why is it attractive to tourists?

• Climate – Summer is hot with average August temperature of 30 degrees

• Akamas peninsula with unspoilt forests

• Beaches with breeding turtles eg Nissi beach

• Troodos mountains

• Greco peninsula with caves

• Cruise ships stop here

• Day trips to Egypt and Jerusalem

• Bars, discos and nightlife

• Waterworld waterpark

• Marine park with performing dolphins and seals

• Ancient ruins like Makronissos Tombs

Effects of tourism on the environment

Good

• New hotels built

• Beach cleaned and maintained

Bad

• Beach destroyed by new hotels right on beach

• Turtles no longer attracted to beach to breed

• Beach overuse means littering

• Daily cleaning of beach needed

• Pressure on services like sewage

• Power supply problems so government want to build new oil fired power station

Effects of tourism on local people

Good

• Provides 20% of GDP

• Employs 20,000 people in hotels

• Multiplier effect doubles impact

• Local young Cypriots have better night life

• More bus services to Larnica

Bad

• Seasonal jobs

• Only 30% of rooms let in winter

• Loss of local fishing village traditions

• Original inhabitants moved to new village on the hill

• Locals disturbed by noise and bad behavior of tourists

Case study 26:Tourism in Arachova, Viotia, Greece

Location:

• Mt Parnassos is at the Southern tip of the Pindos mountain range

• It is in the Viotia region of Central Greece

• It is only 180km from Athens – close proximity for weekend getaways

• It is one of the largest mountains in Greece at 2457 m

Attractions:

• The Area has been given National Park status since 1938

• Every year some 150,000 people visit the two ski centres of Kellaria and Fterrolakka at Parnassos

• 14 lifts cater to up to 15,000 visitors per day

• 25 marked runs, 12 ski routes with 36km in length total. The longest is 4km long.

• Slopes cater for all abilities from beginners to Black runs

• 7 cross country ski routes

• Half pipe for snowboaders

• Snowmobiling

• Many facilities on the slopes for food, drinks and ski rental

• World famous Delphi site is very close where the Holy Oracle predicted the future of the Ancient Greeks

• Amazing flora, including Cephallonian fir, and fauna, like wolves, hares, eagles and vultures

• Scenic views of surrounding countryside and olive groves

• Hiking, mountain biking, 4x4 driving, paragliding, hunting

• Many well marked mountain trails for walkers

• Unique scenery – the limestone rock that dominates results in numerous precipices, caves and gorges

• Local vineyards

• Beautiful, traditional charm of Arachova with its local stone houses and staired side roads ascending up through the town.

ADVANTAGES OF TOURISM

Benefits on the economy

• Increases GDP

• Taxes increase the revenue for the government

• Jobs – more diverse range

• Less reliance on farming and greater economic diversification

• Foreign currency

• Multiplier effect

• Helps fund more infrastructure

Social benefits

• News ideas and improves education

• More services for locals to use

• Better public transport, services and widens amenities for locals to use

Environmental benefits

• National park status since 1938 – encourages tighter environmental legislation

• Litter collection

• Planting trees

• Buildings in Arachova built to local traditional standards to ensure quality of the environment remains

DISADVANTAGES OF TOURISM

Problems for the economy

• Leakage – money spent on imported products from outside

• Seasonal jobs – more workers needed only in winter high season

• Managerial jobs mainly go to the people from outside – and locals tend to get the more unskilled and manual jobs e.g. the lady who is the Manager of the ski lifts comes from Athens

• Reliance on tourism in times of an economic crisis can be risky

• House prices increase – so local young people cannot afford to stay in the area when they try to buy their first home

• Prices of goods like food increase so life becomes tough for locals

Social problems

• Local traditions lost

• Young people more exposed to ideas from outside that can bring tension between the youngsters and older generations

• Increase rift between those who have done well and badly out of tourism – dual society

• Increased material aspirations

Environmental problems

• Traffic congestion - roads are jammed when coaches make their way through Arachova town on their way to the ski resort or Delphi archaeological site.

• Erosion of ski slopes by up to 20cm on the centre of the piste which also results in soil compaction and decreased infiltration.

• Loss of vegetation on the slopes – reduced vegetation height, vegetation diversity and increased bare ground and exposure of rocks.

• The landscape was quarried and hacked apart to install the ski lifts all over the mountain. Little consideration was given to the environmental impact when they were installed back in the 1970s and 1980s pollution from large number of vehicles.

• Litter

• Graffiti

Case study 27. Tourism in Zanzibar (LEDC)

Located in the Indian ocean 37km from coast of Tanzania

Why is it attractive to tourists?

• Climate – temperature always 28-38 degrees

• Island surrounded by coral reefs

• Unspoilt white sand beaches

• Swimming with dolphins

• Jozani forest reserve with walks with guides

• Red colombus monkey can be seen

• Stone Town with Dr Livingstones house

Effects of tourism on the environment

Good

• Hotels at Nungwi built to fit in with the environment

Bad

• Raw sewage flows straight into the Indian ocean

• Waste left around island

• Fear of water contamination and lack of drinking water

Effects of tourism on local people

Good

• Job opportunities

• More diverse economy - no longer just relying on primary industry

• Improved roads to use

Bad

• Loss of fishing stocks

• Loss of access to beach for locals as the hotels control it

• Many jobs menial and low paid

• Fresh water supplies are only for the benefit of the hotels

• Cost of food has risen locally

• Tourists culture and behavior often offends locals

• The local economy starts to depend on tourism

• Increased crime and muggings

Case study 28. Ecotourism in the Maldives

Island republic in the Indian Ocean

Why is it attractive to tourists?

• 1.190 coral islands

• 280 inhabited islands and 80 resort islands

• Climate – 26 to 30 degrees all year round

How has it been developed to be sustainable?

• Resorts only built on non inhabited islands

• Environmental Impact assessment before resorts built

• All resorts 5m back from treeline

• No buildings taller than the trees

• No more than 20% of islands built on

• Incinerators to get rid of non biodegradable waste

• Resorts recycle water for gardens

• Solar hot water systems

• Septic tanks for sewage

• Desalination of seawater to freshwater

• Breakwater along Male coast to deal with sealevels rising

• College for hotel and catering for locals to improve skills

• Beach nourishment

• Tourists only visit designated home islands in small groups of 15-30

• Local products are being sold as souvenirs

Case study 29. Migration from USA to Mexico

• Mexicans make up 29.5 % of all foreigners in the USA.

• Mexican immigrants account for about 20% of the legal immigrants living in the USA.

• Brain drain is occurring out of Mexico.

e.g. An estimated 14,000 of the 19,000 Mexicans with doctorates live in the USA (International Organization for Migration)

Push factors from Mexico (Santa Ines) (2010)

• Poor medical facilities - 1800 per doctor

• Low paid jobs - GDP per capita $14,406

• Adult literacy rates 55% - poor education prospects

• Life expectancy 72 yrs

• 40% Unemployed

• Unhappy life – poor standard of living

• Shortage of food

• Poor farming conditions

• National average poverty level of 37 percent

Pull Factors – Reasons Mexicans are attracted to the USA (2010)

• Excellent medical facilities - 400 per doctor

• Well paid jobs - GDP per capita $46,860

• Adult literacy rates 99% - good education prospects

• Life expectancy 76 yrs

• Many jobs available for low paid workers such as Mexicans

• Better housing

• Family links

• Bright lights

Effects on USA

• Illegal migration costs the USA millions of dollars for border patrols and prisons

• Mexicans are seen as a drain on the USA economy

• Migrant workers keep wages low which affects Americans

• They cause problems in cities due cultural and racial issues

• Mexican migrants benefit the US economy by working for low wages

• Mexican culture has enriched the US border states with food, language and music

• The incidents of TB has been increasing greatly due to the increased migration

Effects on Mexico (Santa Ines)

• The Mexican countryside has a shortage of economically active people

• Many men emigrate leaving a majority of women

• Women may have trouble finding marriage partners

• Young people tend to migrate leaving the old and the very young

• Legal and illegal immigrants together send some $6 billion a year back to Mexico

• Certain villages such as Santa Ines have lost 2/3 of its inhabitants

Case study 30: Migration from Turkey to Germany

← West Germany needed rebuilding after World War 2 in 1945

← Extra labour was needed

← Workers moved from poorer European countries like Turkey to Germany

← Many of the first Turkish migrants were from farming communities so they went to agricultural jobs in West Germany

← Then they got slightly better paid jobs in factories and construction

← Many of the jobs were dirty, unskilled, low paid and involved working long unsociable hours. Many Germans did not want to do these jobs

← By 1989 German had 4.5 million ‘guest workers’ which was 7.4% of the working population.

← Nearly one third of these were from Turkey

← Most of the Turks that arrived were male and aged 20-29 (see pyramid page 28 in text book)

← After 1973 recruitment of foreign workers became illegal

← However, many Turks still arrive to be united with their families

← Turks have their own centres in many German cities – they speak their own language and have their own culture (food, dress and entertainment)

Benefits for Turkey

← Reduced pressure on jobs and resources eg food

← Loses people of child bearing age and so these is a decreased birth rate

← Migrants develop new skills which they may take back to Turkey

← Money earned in Germany is sent back to Turkey

Problems for Turkey

← Loses people in working age group

← Loses people most likely to have some skills and education

← Mainly males leave and families are divided

← Elderly people are left behind which increases death rate

Benefits for Germany

← Overcomes labour shortage

← Workers prepared to do the jobs that locals do not want to do

← Work for long hours for little money

← Cultural advantages (eg restaurants)

← Some highly skilled workers

Problems for Germany

← Puts pressure on jobs

← Low quality overcrowded houses

← Ethnic groups do not tend to integrate

← Racial tension

← Limited skilled workers arriving

← Language problems

← Sometimes health problems

Case study 31: Migration from Algeria to France

• Since world war two France has had migrant workers to rebuild their country after WW2

• As France became richer it became more popular with migrants from former colonies like Algeria

• Of France’s 58 million population 17% are now Algerians

• Advantages for Algerians

• Reduces pressure on jobs and resources like food in Algeria

• Birth rate declines in Algerian as people of reproductive age working in France

• Migrants learn new skills which they can use on return to Algeria

• Money sent back to country of origin

• Disadvantages for Algerians

• Loss of people of working age

• Loss of the most educated and skilled people

• High death rate as many elderly left behind

• Dependency on money sent home

• Advantages for French (hosts)

• Overcomes labour shortage

• Algerians prepared to do unskilled job

• Algerians prepared to work long hours for less money

• North African restaurants and other culture added to France

• Some Algerian migrants are highly skilled

• Disadvantages of French (hosts)

• Immigrants unemployed if the economy gets worse

• Algerian migrants may have to live in poor quality overcrowded housing – called Bidonvilles

• Racial tension

• Migrants living in ghettos and not mixing with French

• Limited skills

Case study 32: Refugees in Rwanda

• In 1990 the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), a rebel group, composed mostly of Tutsi refugees, invaded northern Rwanda from Uganda.

• The Rwandan Civil War was fought between the Hutu regime, with support from the French speaking African countries and the RPF, with support from Uganda.

• Hutu Power became an ideology that asserted that the Tutsi intended to enslave Hutus and thus must be resisted at all costs.

• The Hutu leader Habyarimana was assassinated in April 1994 which was the short term cause of the mass killings of Tutsis and pro-peace Hutus

• Extremist political groups organized the massacre. They encouraged young Hutus to carry machetes and they ‘recruited’ many child soldiers.

• Radio broadcasts significantly encouraged the violence .

• Many people could not escape the violence as roads and transport links were blocked.

• The slaughter ended when rebel forces of the Tutsi led Rwandese Patriotic Front (RPF) overthrew the genocidal government.

• Many refugees (mostly Hutus) fled from Rwanda to neighboring Zaire (~2 million), Tanzania (~480,000), Burundi (~200,000) and Uganda (~10,000).

• An estimated 300,000 people died on route to or in refugee camps due to starvation and cholera

• By late 1997 only 100,000 were thought to be still out of Rwanda, and they were thought to be the remnants of the defeated army and the civilian militias known as Interahamwe.

• Rwanda is a very poor country with a market economy; over 90 percent of the population earns its living through subsistence agriculture.

• The principal export crops are coffee and tea.

• Gross National Product per capita is estimated at $210 per year.

• The massive genocide and war in 1994 resulted in the destruction of much of the country's economic infrastructure, including utilities, roads, and hospitals.

Case study 33. Function of Piraeus, Greece

Piraeus is the urban settlement next to Athens in Attica.

It was the port of the ancient city of Athens and was chosen to serve as the modern port when Athens was re-founded in 1834. Piraeus remains a major shipping and industrial centre

Reasons suitable as port function:

It consists of a rocky promontory, containing three natural harbours

• The large port on the north-west is an important commercial harbour for the eastern Mediterranean Sea as it is very deep and allows large vessels to shelter there

• Two smaller ports Zea and Mikrolimano also provide good shelter and are used for naval purposes.

• Pireaus location is able to link Athens with every island in the eastern portion of Greece, the island of Crete, the Cyclades, the Dodecanese, and much of the northern and the eastern Aegean.

• The land was vast when the port was constructed so it could be built with large areas for docking cargo. Much of that part of the harbour is in suburban Drapetsona and Keratsini.

• Close to oil refineries at Elefsina and other industrial production areas

• Rail, bus, road and metro links for transporting either passengers or cargo

• Workers available as the population of Piraeus is 175, 000,697 (2001).

Piraeus now also has commercial, educational , administrative and residential functions too

Case study 34. The Mall, Athens – a regional shopping centre

• Good road connections as close to Attiki Odos motorway

• Mainline train and bus connections link with other areas of Athens

• Large area of land – 585000 square metres on the outskirts of the city at Maroussi so cheaper than in centre

• 4 floors with more than 200 retail stores, restaurants, cafes and Village cinemas

• Space for parking underground (90,000 square metres)

• Workers come from the local area of Maroussi and from further afield

• Many shoppers live within an hours drive of the Mall (more than 3 million)

Case study 35. Attiki Odos

• The idea began in 1960s to construct a motorway that would constitute the regional ring road of Athens

• The main objectives at that time were to facilitate traffic circulation in the road network of the Attica basin and to mitigate the environmental problems caused by traffic in the area.

• Passes through residential districts and areas of great historical significance, made implementation of the project a complex exercise.

• Nevertheless, in the mid-1990s

• Involved connections with the suburban railway and the subway (METRO) networks, so that they would become operational before the Olympic Games.

• The construction of tunnels in Imittos, Metamorfosi, Iraklio, Chalandri and Vrilissia etc.

• The various flood protection projects constructed from Mesogeia to Elefsina that have secured the whole Attica Prefecture against floods.

• Tolls are charged to keep up the maintenance of the road.

• Cars consumes 60% less petrol when using Attica Tollway than the petrol it consumes when using the congested urban network (where average speed is only about 20 km/hour). It reduces air pollution.

• On Attica Tollway air pollution is systematically monitored by 8 stations set up at key locations along the motorway.

• Also reclaiming quarry sites (used for excavating material to build Attiki odos) eg for sports and recreational usage

Case study 36. Problems of living in an MEDC city eg Athens

Unemployment – approximately 10% (higher now with crisis)

Many people with limited skills

Low income families have economic pressures

Single parents families

Crime

Racial tension

Lack of affordable housing for everyone – homelessness

Overcrowding – approximately 3.3 million of the total 12 million Greeks live in Attica

Noise

Air Pollution stays over Athens as mountains surround the city causing temperature inversion

Derelict land

Empty buildings

Graffiti

Traffic congestion

Massive waste production and landfill at Ano Liosia is full

Expensive to maintain services eg health and hospitals

Loss of Greenfield sites due to urban sprawl

Illegal immigrants (8-10% of the population thought to be migrants)

Disruptions due to strike activity

Riots in December 2008 and 2011

Cost of living high( 90% of New York) but average wage lower in comparison

Case Study 37. Urban Problems in Rio, Brazil

• Rio was formerly the capital of Brazil until the government decided to locate the capital inland in Brasilia.

• Approximately 10 million people live in and around Rio.

• It is a city of contrasts with rich people living in luxury around Copacabana beach and the vast majority living in poor conditions around the edge of the city.

• Problems in the city include housing, crime, traffic and pollution.

HOUSING

• An estimated 0.5 million are homeless.

• Approximately 1 million live in favelas (informal shanty settlements). Two examples are Morro de Alemao and Rocinha. (YOU MUST KNOW THESE NAMES!!)

• Another million live in poor quality government housing in the periferia.

• The favela housing lacks basic services like running water, sewerage or electricity.

• The houses are constructed from wood, corrugated iron, broken bricks and tiles or other materials found lying around.

• Favelas are often found on land that is steep, by the side of roads, railways etc and flash floods can destroy such houses and take peoples lives.

• At first the government tried to bulldoze such communities but now they remain because of the community spirit, samba music and football etc.

CRIME

• Favelas are thought to be associated with drugs, violence etc. Tourists to Rio are warned not to enter favela areas or take valuables to beaches etc.

• Some wealthy are moving to new towns to avoid crime.

TRAFFIC AND POLLUTION

• Mountains around the city keep the fumes in the city and make the vehicles use a limited number of routes. This results in congestion and noise

• A vast amount of rubbish is produced and in favelas this is not collected. Along with open sewerage drains it results in the spread of diseases.

SOLUTIONS TO THESE PROBLEMS

1. SELF HELP HOUSING ROCINHA

• Most of old temporary wooden houses replaced by brick and tile and extended to use every square centimetre of land.

• Many residents have set up their own shops and small industries in the informal sector.

• Government have added electricity, paving, lighting, water pipes but the steep hills still restrict.

2. FAVELA BAIRRO PROJECT

• 1990S government chose 16 favelas to improve using 250 million euros.

• Replaced wood buildings with brick and gave each house a yard.

• Widened the streets so that the emergency services and waste collectors could get access.

• Improved sanitation, health facilities and sports facilities.

• Used residents for labour to develop their skills and in return residents paid taxes.

3. NEW TOWN BARRA DA TIJUCA

• Land outside to South of Rio was uninhabited until motorway was built in 1970s

• Rich moved out of Rio to avoid problems of city

• It has 5km of shops, schools, hospitals, offices, places of entertainment etc

• Spacious and luxury accommodation in 10-30 floor high rise apartment blocks with security and facilities or detached houses.

• Both adults in each family chose to work in high paid jobs tp pay for expensive life.

• Families with own cars but also well connected with public transport.

These areas have own favelas as house keepers, gardeners etc cannot afford accommodation

Case study 38. Changing location of heavy industry: The iron and steel industry in Wales

In the 19th century the iron and steel works were found in South Wales (eg Ebbw Vale) on the coalfields as:

• Coal was bulky and needed in large quantities so it was cheaper and easier to locate near this input.

• Water from nearby rivers used for power and effluent (waste)

• Exports sent by routes through valleys so easy

• Large numbers of unskilled workers from surrounding villages like Ebbw vale and Merthyr Tydfil

• Local markets eg Cardiff and Newport

• Small scale and manual technology only

By the 1970s Ebbw Vale had only 2 steelworks because the advantages no longer existed.

The steelworks moved to the coast at Port Talbot because:

• Imported coal from far away as Australia so port needed

• Iron ore imported from North Africa and America

• Coastal water used for cooling

• Electricity from National Grid

• Large are of cheap flat land

• Government and EU incentives to locate there

• M4 motorway links Wales to London for outputs

• Computers, lasers and other technology now used

Case study 39. High technology industries: The M4 corridor

M4 corridor runs from Wales to London passing Bristol and Newbury on the way – it has a lot of high tech firms like microelectronics, Rolls Royce and British Aerospace because it has:

• M4 motorway to allow inputs and outputs to be transported

• Mainline railway Wales to London

• Heathrow airport for international links

• Large labourforce who have moved out of London into new towns and overspill towns

• Nearby firms to exchange ideas

• Near Bristol, Bath, Reading and London Universities for expertise and research

• Attractive environment for workers eg National parks like Dartmoor

Case study 40. High technology industries: Cambridge Science Park

• Was built in 1970

• 90 high tech firms locate there

• The majority of companies are involved in scientific research and development

They locate here because of:

• Low cost of land

• Large area of land – 152 acres

• Pleasant working environment as 20 of 152 acres are parkland and landscaped

• Large supply of expert labour from nearby Cambridge university - 5,000 people in total.

• Links with Cambridge University for research and development

• Park facilities include a CCTV system, conference facilities, restaurant and bar, child care nursery, health and fitness centre and squash courts.

• Companies can share maintenance and support services with other firms

• It is linked by roads, regular bus service and cycle routes to the town centre.

• Not too far from London Stansted airport for international links

• M11 motorway link to London for inputs and outputs

Case study 41. Industry in a NIC: Malaysia

(PLEASE NOTE NIC=NEWLY INDUSTRIALISING COUNTRY)

• Malaysia first developed heavy industry like steel and ship building

• Now concentrating on high tech industry like microelectronics and biotechnology

• It aims to be a MEDC by 2020

• Many industries not run by government anymore but privatised

• Uses a large workforce

• So little unemployment that needs to attract workers from Indonesia and Philippines

• Attracting foreign companies too

• Now building a new international airport, new towns, science parks and high tech buildings like Petronas building

Case study 42. Informal sector industry in LEDCS: beach vendor on Copacabana beach, Rio, Brazil

• Beach vendor sells sunhats, lotions, bikinis, cold drinks, jewellery and roses for 50 cents.

• Self employed

• Small scale

• Little capital (money) involved

• Labour intensive

• Use cheap resources

• Low standards of goods

• Work irregular wages for uncertain wages

• No government assistance as not paying any taxes

• Illegal

• Women and children as workers

Good as:

• Employs many people 15,000

• Gives skills that many be useful in other careers

• Uses local materials

Case study 43. Multi National Companies in a LEDC (MNCs)– Sao Paulo, Brazil

• German company Volkswagen opened factories in Sao Paulo in the mid 1960s

• Brazilian government encourages MNCs as they thought that support industries, jobs etc would raise the standard of living

• For Volkswagen the benefits were

• Modern factories could be built cheaply and easily

• Guaranteed market for VW in Brazil and South America

• Wages low so production cost lower

• Military government in brazil so strikes unlikely

• For Brazil benefits were

• 5% of export earnings from cars

• Support services

• Jobs

• Skills

• Problems for Brazil

• Leakage – money from profits taken out by VW

• Increase car use in brazil has increased cost of oil imports

• Rural-urban migration for workers has caused problems in Sao Paulo

• Wages of the workers on the assembly line are too low to support the family

• Workers sometimes forced to work very long hours

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